Perhaps a Guardian journalist reads this blog?

The MediaGuardian 100 this year reflects the extent to which the
individual had become empowered in the online age. Everyone can be a
broadcaster-publisher, as user-generated content is sent around around
the world. A consumer can be a critic, a trend setter and – a less
welcome consequence

Why we're not living in 1984 today: "Orwell's oversight" is acknowledged in everything but name in a recent poll in The Media Guardian. They've put "YOU" into the top position of their Media Guardian Top 100. The rest of the list features the 'great and the good' of the media industry. The list itself is filler material that the newspaper churns out every year. That it now acknowledges the media's audience is amusing because, as I've said many times over, this has never really been the focus for most of the UK's broadcast media. Particularly in the state funded, market leading, BBC.

The wider picture here is that the broadcast media is being dramatically outflanked by the internet, which represents the uncontrolled voices of "normal people".

They have no idea how to deal with it.

I've deliberately cut the final sentence to make it look as if they hate this change in the power dynamic. It should read:

"A consumer can can be a critic, a trend setter and – a less welcome consequence of social media – a troll."

In short he's a TV presenter and an award winning radio presenter.
In long, he's worked on LBC, Kerrang Radio, Hallam FM and The Bay. And other places, for a bit.
The TV show he presented was called "Esoteria" and ran for two series on Controversial TV (Sky channel 200).
Currently he is, as they say in radio, between jobs.